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Nanoimprinting on optical fibre end faces for chemical sensing

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 08:58 authored by Gorgi Kostovski, D.J. White, Arnan MitchellArnan Mitchell, Michael AustinMichael Austin, Paul Stoddart
Optical fiber surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) sensors offer a potential solution to monitoring low chemical concentrations in-situ or in remote sensing scenarios. We demonstrate the use of nanoimprint lithography to fabricate SERS-compatible nanoarrays on the end faces of standard silica optical fibers. The antireflective nanostructure found on cicada wings was used as a convenient template for the nanoarray, as high sensitivity SERS substrates have previously been demonstrated on these surfaces. Coating the high fidelity replicas with silver creates a dense array of regular nanoscale plasmonic resonators. A monolayer of thiophenol was used as a low concentration analyte, from which strong Raman spectra were collected using both direct endface illumination and through-fiber interrogation. This unique combination of nanoscale replication with optical fibers demonstrates a high-resolution, low-cost approach to fabricating high-performance optical fiber chemical sensors.

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    ISSN - Is published in 0277786X

Start page

70042H-1

End page

70042H-4

Total pages

4

Outlet

Proceedings of SPIE, Volume 7004: 19th International Conference on Optical Fibre Sensors

Editors

D. Sampson et. al.

Name of conference

19th International Conference on Optical Fibre Sensors

Publisher

SPIE

Place published

United States

Start date

2008-04-14

End date

2008-04-18

Language

English

Copyright

© 2008 SPIE

Former Identifier

2006009582

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-11-08

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